Saturday, December 13, 2008

American Artist article on Occhuzzie!

Drawing: Graphite and Charcoal in the Form of Oil Paint?

Occhuzzie Paint Company, a small manufacturer based in Charlotte, North Carolina, unveiled two new pigments at the Savannah College of Art & Design's Art Materials Show, held at the beginning of October. One featured ground graphite suspended in linseed oil, and the other featured ground charcoal in linseed oil. The graphite "paint" has an ever-so-slight sheen that betrays its roots, and the charcoal has the rich blackness one would expect. Lance Main, the founder of Occhuzzie, says he had underdrawings (underpaintings?) in mind when he came up with these two paints. The logic seems sound: Use charcoal or graphite that is already infused with linseed oil so the underdrawing is of the same material as the color portion of the painting.
Occhuzzie's paints seem well equipped to create excellent grisaille underpaintings, but how do they interact with mixing whites or titanium white? I'm sharing the samples Main gave me with some artist-friends to see what they think. Regardless of whether these two paints take off, Main is on to something. His handmade colors are gaining the respect of top-level artists. For more information, visit Occhuzzie's website at www.occhuzziepaintcompany.com. And check back here and in the pages of Drawing mag to see the results of artists' tests on these materials.






Graphite and Charcoal Paint@text:Blurring the boundary between painting and drawing are two new paints from Occhuzzie Paint Company: charcoal and graphite pigments. The family-owned business, which is gaining a reputation for high-quality handmade paints, infused powdered graphite and powdered charcoal with linseed oil to produce jars of paint. Used as an underdrawing, the paints could create a true grisaille if laid down as blocks of tone, or will sit under oil paint more stably as a linear underdrawing because it has already been fused with the oil. The two new paints are available in 125ml and 65ml jars. For more information, visit www.occhuzziepaintcompany.com.

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